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Jewish "Modesty Patrols" Sow Fear In Israel

AMY TEIBEL   10/ 4/08 10:45 AM ET   AP

Jewish Modesty Patrols

JERUSALEM — In Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, where the rule of law sometimes takes a back seat to the rule of God, zealots are on a campaign to stamp out behavior they consider unchaste. They hurl stones at women for such "sins" as wearing a red blouse, and attack stores selling devices that can access the Internet.

In recent weeks, self-styled "modesty patrols" have been accused of breaking into the apartment of a Jerusalem woman and beating her for allegedly consorting with men. They have torched a store that sells MP4 players, fearing devout Jews would use them to download pornography.

"These breaches of purity and modesty endanger our community," said 38-year-old Elchanan Blau, defending the bearded, black-robed zealots. "If it takes fire to get them to stop, then so be it."

Many ultra-Orthodox Jews are dismayed by the violence, but the enforcers often enjoy quiet approval from rabbis eager to protect their own reputations as guardians of the faith, community members say. And while some welcome anything that keeps secular culture out of their cloistered world, others feel terrorized, knowing that the mere perception of impropriety could ruin their lives.

"There are eyes and ears all over the place, very similar to what you hear about in countries like Iran," says Israeli-American novelist Naomi Ragen, an observant Jew who has chronicled the troubles that confront some women living in the ultra-Orthodox world.

The violence has already deepened the antagonism between the 600,000 haredim, or God-fearing, and the secular majority, which resents having religious rules dictated to them.

Religious vigilantes operate in a society that has granted their community influence well beyond its numbers _ partly out of a commitment to revive the great centers of Jewish scholarship destroyed in the Holocaust, but also because the Orthodox are perennial king-makers in Israeli coalition politics.

Thus public transport is grounded for the Jewish Sabbath each Saturday, and the rabbis control all Jewish marriage and divorce in Israel.

In recent years, however, the haredim have eased up on their long campaign to impose their rules on secular areas, and nowadays many restaurants and suburban shopping centers are open on the Sabbath.

These days, most vigilante attacks take place in the zealots' own neighborhoods.

Israel police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the modesty police are not an organized phenomenon, just rogue enforcers carrying out isolated attacks. But Israel's Justice Ministry used the term "modesty patrols" in an indictment against a man accused of assaulting the Jerusalem woman.

The unidentified, 31-year-old woman had left the ultra-Orthodox fold after getting divorced, according to the indictment filed by the Jerusalem district attorney's office. The indictment said her assailant tried to get her to leave her apartment in a haredi neighborhood in Jerusalem by gagging, beating and threatening to kill her. He was paid $2,000 for the attack, it said.

A 17-year-old who moved to Israel from New York five years ago said she was hospitalized after being attacked with pepper spray by a crowd of men outraged that she was walking down a Jerusalem street with boys.

"They can burn in hell," said the girl, who would identify herself only as Rivka.

She lives in Beit Shemesh, a town outside Jerusalem where the vigilantism has been particularly violent. Zealots there have thrown rocks and spat at women, and set fire to trash bins to protest impiety. Walls of the neighborhood are plastered with signs exhorting women to dress modestly _ spelled out as closed-necked, long-sleeved blouses and long skirts.

The state, catering to religious sensitivities, subsidizes gender-segregated bus routes that service religious neighborhoods. Ragen and several other women challenged the practice in Israel's Supreme Court after an Orthodox Canadian woman in her 50s told police she was kicked, slapped, pushed to the floor and spat upon by men for refusing to move to the back of the bus.

Another Beit Shemesh girl, who asked to be identified only as Esther, said zealots threw rocks, cursed and spat at a friend for wearing a red blouse _ taboo because the color attracts attention.

Yitzhak Polack, a 50-year-old Jerusalem teacher, is one of those who deplore such behavior.

"They are stupid troublemakers who are bringing shame and disgrace on this holy community," he said.

But the rabbis are afraid to condemn them, says Yehuda Meshi-Zahav, another community member.

"They can't come out against zealots who champion modesty. Here and there they write against violence, but the militants ultimately set the tone," he said.

Stores are targeted too.

In August, a Jerusalem man was placed under house arrest on suspicion he set fire to a store in a haredi district of the city that sold MP4 players.

"It started about six months ago. They would come into the store, about 15 of them at a time, screaming, 'This store burns souls!' and they would throw merchandise on the floor and threaten customers," said 31-year-old Aaron Gold, a haredi worker at the Space electronic store.

One Friday night, just before the Sabbath was about to begin, "they smashed a window, doused the place with gasoline and lit a match," Gold said.

Now, a big sign behind the counter says, "All products sold in this store are under rabbinical supervision. By order of the rabbis, no MP4s are sold here."

Clothing stores that sell clothes regarded as provocative have been vandalized, and bleach thrown at merchandise.

Suspicion is all that's needed to spark an attack.

Girls have been expelled from school after being seen talking to boys, a punishment that ruins their marriage prospects.

"It could be very innocent; she could be talking to her brother," Ragen said. But once thrown out of school, "no one _ NO ONE _ will take you in," she added.

In one case, the violence reached the highest levels of haredi society.

Three years ago, a son of Israel's Sephardi chief rabbi, Shlomo Amar, was accused of kidnapping a 17-year-old boy, beating him at knifepoint and terrorizing him with snarling dogs because he had sought the attentions of the accused's unchaperoned sister.

The son was sentenced to two years and eight months in jail.

His sister married a different suitor the following year.

___

Associated Press Writer Ian Deitch contributed to this report.

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JERUSALEM — In Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, where the rule of law sometimes takes a back seat to the rule of God, zealots are on a campaign to stamp out behavior they consider uncha...
JERUSALEM — In Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, where the rule of law sometimes takes a back seat to the rule of God, zealots are on a campaign to stamp out behavior they consider uncha...
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10:41 PM on 10/05/2008
see Religulous
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pointyheadprodigy
Let me get this straight
10:33 PM on 10/05/2008
What a bunch of Taliban copycats
08:58 PM on 10/05/2008
"Many ultra-Orthodox Jews are dismayed by the violence"

Not all chassidim act this way or condone this violent behavior. The ones who do are uneducated zealots who don't really understand Jewish Law.
06:31 PM on 10/05/2008
Yay religion!

Not really.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patianneb
toothed night fury
06:22 PM on 10/05/2008
Throwing stones at women...well, well, well, welcome to the wonderful world of the "eye" countries....Eye-rack, Eye-ran, and now....Eyes-reel ..... ?
Time marches ever backward (and as usual, women suffer first and usually most) when religious fanaticism rears its ugly head....ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD it rears its ugly head.
09:38 PM on 10/05/2008
You forgot Eye-laska and Eye-merica

http://www.startribune.com/nation/30269879.html?elr=KArks:DCiUMEaPc:UiacyKUnciatkEP7DhU
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barbwiregrrl
06:18 PM on 10/05/2008
What I thought was hilarious was a few years ago the ultra orthdox rabbis and the mullahs got together to agree that they hate g@y people.

I mean gee even these two groups can find commonaltiy in hate.
06:02 PM on 10/05/2008
*see Religulous.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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JTinParadise
Dem in the Sacramento Delta
05:41 PM on 10/05/2008
Don't you just love all the freedom and peace religious faith has given mankind around the world??
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1dogs2
05:39 PM on 10/05/2008
This in the land of our great friend and ally, Israel, which we are required by treaty to defend. I heard a lot from this administration about the evils of the Taliban and particularly about their suppression of women. Does the administration have anything to say about this conduct??? Or about the emerging facts that suggest that American pro-lifers hacked the voting machines in Ohio in 2004 and stole the state (and the election) for Bush? All religious extremism is anti-democratic. It has all but destroyed our own country.
11:52 PM on 10/05/2008
"the emerging facts that suggest that American pro-lifers hacked the voting machines in Ohio in 2004 and stole the state (and the election) for Bush?"

Has some new information come out about this? I believe the votes were stolen, but was it by pro-lifers? I would suspect Rovian dirty tricks, but religious kooks? Please direct me to this info so I can pass it on to those people I know who poo-poo the whole election stealing crime.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karela
04:17 PM on 10/05/2008
Ultra Orthodox Jews are practicing Nazis? How little people learn. Religion has been the greatest cause of human suffering on this planet for all of human life. A desire for a connection with the Divine is Spiritual, as in of the Spirit. A group of people joining together and saying this is what God is, we're the only ones who know the "truth" and only people who agree with us can go to heaven--is Religion. Sometimes Spiritual people find their way to churches and practice in their hearts something better. Sometimes groups of people practicing Religion break into houses and beat people, or they burn them at the stake, or they start crusades and jihads. The red blouse for the woman might be part of an essential step in her Spiritual evolution. Only God knows. This is really all about big egos. I have to force you to "worship" God in the same way I do. You have to be wrong so that I can be right. These unwise choices cause suffering for the both the victim and the aggressor. It's just that the aggressor isn't aware of the pain he/she has brought to him/her self yet. In large and small ways, we should all remember these things as we interact with others.
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cobraxus
Defend The Innocent_Protect The Weak
03:48 PM on 10/05/2008
what do you expect?The guy who murdered Rabin is considered a hero by these people and has even been allowed to marry and father children while in jail.It's The Stern Gang all over again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YankeeCanuck
dog
08:31 PM on 10/05/2008
Israel is a divided society. The settlers and ultra-orthodox are actually a small percentage of the population. They portray anyone who criticizes their actions as anti-Semitic. The irrational notion of religious purity/sanctity is politicized. THink about our own Christian extreme right and you get the picture. They are not large in number, but they are relentless in their pursuit of political power.
03:43 PM on 10/05/2008
I see the Orthodox rabbis have made alliance with the Mullah Nazruddin, who is clearly their
intellectual superior.
03:40 PM on 10/05/2008
When did Judaism get so much like the Taliban? Strange bedfellows.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hirnlego
04:52 PM on 10/05/2008
Why? The closer you follow the three desert dogmas so called holy books the more fundamentalist it becomes.
03:20 PM on 10/05/2008
Be sure to watch Morgan Spurlock's awesome film Where In The World Is Osama Bin Laden? for a sequence where he becomes the target of these guys. The fear is so real you can feel it through the camera, a bit like Barbet Schroeder's footage of Idi Amin.

Highly recommended to educate people about Al-Qeda.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hirnlego
04:52 PM on 10/05/2008
Yes, its very good. Makes many great points
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maryoca
02:52 PM on 10/05/2008
Quite a few years ago (1995 - Beijing Women's Conference?) I heard a speech on the radio. The speaker was a wonderfully articulate Iranian woman who spoke about how religious fundamentalism of any color has at its core the oppression of women. I listened raptly how she delineated the ant-woman policies and actions of Islamic, Jewish and Christian fundamentalists. I wish I could find a recording or transcript of the piece because she was absolutely right and this is a perfect example. We must stand up and say "no more!"